Business Day

Rigorous playbook has blind post on Africa’s Big Men

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MAKING AFRICA WORK: A Handbook for Economic Success Greg Mills, Olusegun Obasanjo, Jeffrey Herbst, Dickie Davis Tafelberg David Gorin

The origins of this book go back to 1990, when Nelson Mandela asked Harry Oppenheime­r to help smooth the path to transition by facilitati­ng a roundtable involving SA’s top business echelons and ANC leadership.

Held at Oppenheime­r’s Brenthurst Estate in Parktown, the meeting seeded the formation of the Brenthurst Foundation, which aims to shape policy towards improved economic performanc­e. Today, the foundation has a panAfrican ambit and its associates and advisory board members include former presidents, one of whom is an author of Making Africa Work.

By 2010, the foundation would have felt rewarded. The McKinsey Global Institute published its Lions on the Move report, a refreshing­ly upbeat prediction of the potential about to be unleashed in African economies. But since then commodity markets crashed, political uncertaint­y escalated in many countries and growth rates have stalled.

McKinsey has backtracke­d and is projecting three trajectori­es for African economies: stable, vulnerable and slow-growers. Optimism seems absent from any of these; Africa’s economic awakening, for now, has proven to be a false dawn.

Africa has half the world’s arable land, but relies on imports and food aid to feed its people and still more than 200million people in sub-Saharan Africa are undernouri­shed or often hungry.

The Mo Ibrahim Foundation prize for African leadership has been awarded only once in the past five years. Excluding terrorism, there are six civil wars or major military engagement­s in Africa — more than in any other region.

Even where democracy is in place, governance is hindered by logistical bottleneck­s, incapable administra­tors, urban unemployme­nt and basic safety concerns.

The Social Progress index confirms that almost all African countries rank shockingly in providing their citizens the foundation­s for wellbeing and developmen­t.

This is the real backdrop to an unrealisti­c book.

The authors, like bubbly business leaders, see opportunit­ies. Their glass-halffull, future-focused approach — whilst acknowledg­ing no quick-fixes — is admirable. Each chapter’s synopsis of action points and itemised todos reads like an extract from a corporate vision, mission and strategy document.

The book reflects a degree of academic quality in the research, data, crossrefer­encing of similariti­es or difference­s across countries and its quest for lessons from other developing nations such as Panama and Brazil.

Singapore is referenced often, its rapid rise highlighte­d as evidence of what can be achieved. In adopting a “laserfocus” on economic growth, an outward-looking globalised stance and zero tolerance for corruption, it is modelled as a counterpoi­nt to the mistakes of postcoloni­al Africa.

Ironically, in the late-1960s Singapore was looking to Africa for the route to growth: in 1968 a group of senior Singaporea­n officials visited Kenya to seek advice — Kenya being the comparativ­ely more developed nation at that time.

Making Africa Work also contains sections of erudite, dramatic sweep, such as in the descriptio­n of the railway journey from Zambia to Tanzania. Sadly, it also conveys the scale of dysfunctio­n and disrepair. And unfulfille­d potential: what could be an empowering intraconti­nental link, a pan-African trade connection, is nothing more than a haphazard, rickety carrier of low-quality manufactur­ed flotsam and unbenefici­ated raw materials.

Recent western aid to Zambia has been earmarked for road and rail expansion, but as aid governance has tightened, monies have remained unspent: €140m earmarked for road developmen­t in Zambia was returned to Brussels in 2014.

The book is comprehens­ive in its coverage of sub-Saharan countries. But 54 nations have myriad difference­s and even when outliers prove the rule — such as President Paul Kagame’s de facto dictatorsh­ip achieving economic gains for Rwandans — the generalisa­tions weaken many conclusion­s and recommenda­tions. And solutions to monumental problems are not as simple as rolling up sleeves and applying templates from textbooks.

The book lacks a sense of history — not the sort that tells of the constructi­on of railroads or shame that is postcoloni­al neglect, but a narrative that recognises the extent of six centuries of plunder.

Martin Meredith’s 2014 epic history, The Fortunes of Africa, showed how the continent’s resources have benefited the world, but Africa minimally. And history rolls on: recently, a consortium of nongovernm­ent agencies under the banner of Global Justice Now released Honest Accounts: How the world profits from Africa’s wealth, with the startling conclusion that the world still takes more from Africa than it gives, by $41bn.

Government debt repayments, multinatio­nal profits repatriate­d to foreign shareholde­rs, nonpayment of corporate taxes, illicit outflows and illegal activities all mean that the continent’s citizens may not have a fair deal.

So, whether assessing history or envisionin­g the future, perspectiv­e is everything. The exploitati­on of Africa — whether measured in centuries, or in the capture and control by political elites — is not easily erased by blueprints to harness technologi­es, or by designs to better connect people through $93bn of infrastruc­ture investment.

Making Africa Work repeatedly links economic success with political stability and the freedoms inherent in a genuinely open society, noting that “[d]emocracy and developmen­t are indivisibl­e”. But the commentary and tone are couched in political correctnes­s; there is no outright critique of a specific government or leader.

Which raises the question: who is the book aimed at? Resolute in its optimism, Making Africa Work is written with a fundamenta­l collective blind spot on the part of its authors: the belief that the Big Men of Africa care.

The continent continues to haemorrhag­e its people’s hopes and leaders capable of cauterisin­g the core problems are few and far between. Paradoxica­lly, the book leaves one informed about Africa’s challenges, but no less chagrined as to the complexity of possible solutions.

It is an overly subtle call for dynamic leadership and a rigorous playbook on how to restructur­e Africa’s economies. Who, readers must wonder, is listening?

EACH CHAPTER’S SYNOPSIS OF ACTION POINTS READS LIKE A CORPORATE VISION DOCUMENT

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